New types of NAND flash memory will not only help to reduce costs of non-voltatile memory, but will also enable makers to build solid-state drives with unprecedented capacities. Toshiba Corp. believes that SSDs with 128TB capacity will become available commercially already three years from now.
In the coming years Toshiba plans to start production of quad-level cell (QLC) and BiCS [bit cost scalable] 3D NAND flash, which will greatly reduce costs of its non-volatile memory. Besides, the new types of NAND flash will also help to increase capacities of NAND flash memory chips and products on their base.
At a recent event Toshiba demonstrated plans to release solid-state drives with whopping 128TB capacities in 2018, reports Nordic Hardware. Such drives will be based on QLC or BiCS NAND flash memory. Toshiba will also have to use all-new controllers for such drives. Besides, it is highly likely that owners of datacentres will have to upgrade their software to take advantage of such SSDs.
Toshiba is confident that capacities of solid-state drives will be considerably higher than capacities of leading-edge hard disk drives. Toshiba does not reveal how much a 128TB SSD can cost three years from now, but it is likely that the price of such solid-state drives will be considerably higher than the price of multiple hard disk drives of such capacity.
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KitGuru Says: While it is possible to create 128TB solid-state drives, it is impossible to build a lot of them because NAND flash manufacturing capacities are constrained. As a result, 128TB drives will be sold only to select customers in 2018 and will hardly reach the mass market three years from now.
OH FFS! Samsung’s promising 16TB by the end of next year and Toshiba’s promising 8x that only two years later. BS.
128TB would probably be enough HD space for the rest of my born days!
Maybe you should read two sentences of “KitGuru Says” again. Simply put, the key here is “audience” (i.e. which type of customer the product is aimed at), and Toshiba own slide says they could do 16TB around this year or next, to compete with Samsung.
Enterprise or not, 128TB is insane.
Something that isn’t mentioned – what interfaced will these drives have? While an impressive feat to have 128TB in one drive, most datacentres probably need the bandwidth of multiple drives.. 🙁
Not at all since most enterprises need petabytes of storage. The only problem I have is they were recently caught of cheating accounting so maybe lying about this. But the n they have nothing to gain to lie about this. Well stocks maybe.
No, 640K is enough.
Some form of PCI-E I bet.